A voltmeter measures an unknown voltage on a target surface using multiple sampling stages or a parallel reference capacitor. A movable shutter may alternately be closed during resetting of a voltage measuring circuit and opened so as to expose a detector plate to the target surface during two sampling stages. Alternatively, the shutter may be used to modulate exposure of a detector plate to the target surface.
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10. A method for measuring an unknown voltage vs on a target surface, the method comprising:
resetting a voltage measuring circuit with a shutter in a closed position so as to substantially block a detector plate of the voltage measuring circuit from exposure to the target surface;
a moving the shutter into an opened position so as to expose the detector plate with a capacitance of cm to the target surface;
measuring a charge vs*B using the detector plate, where B is proportional to cm;
measuring a charge vp*B with the shutter still in the opened position, where vp is a known voltage;
determining the value of B based on the known voltage vp; and
determining the value of vs based on the determined value B.
1. A voltmeter for measuring an unknown voltage vs on a target surface without contacting the target surface, the voltmeter comprising:
a voltage measuring circuit having a detector plate forming a capacitance cm with the target surface; and
a movable shutter for selectively exposing the detector plate to the target surface, wherein the voltage measuring circuit (1) measures, in a first sampling stage, a charge vs*B, where B is proportional to cm; (2) measures, in a second sampling stage, a charge vp*B, where vp is a known voltage introduced by the voltage measuring circuit; (3) determines the value B based on the known voltage vp; and (4) determines the value vs based on the determined value B, and wherein the shutter is placed in a closed position substantially blocking the detector plate from the target surface for resetting the voltage measuring circuit prior to measuring the charge vs*B and the shutter is moved into an opened position exposing the detector plate to the target surface for measuring the charges vs*B and vp*B.
17. A voltmeter for measuring an unknown voltage vs on a target surface without contacting the target surface, the voltmeter comprising:
a voltage measuring circuit having a first detector plate forming a capacitance cm with the target surface and a second detector plate forming a capacitance n*cm with the target surface, where n is a known constant representing that the second detector plate is n times the size of the first detector plate; and
a movable shutter for modulating exposure of the first detector plate to the target surface, wherein the voltage measuring circuit comprises:
a nominal modulation capacitance circuit for measuring a first charge proportional to vs*dCm/dt using the first detector plate;
a parallel capacitance circuit for measuring a second charge proportional to n*cm*dVp/dt using the second detector plate, where vp is a known voltage modulated in phase and frequency with the modulated exposure of the first detector plate;
a comparison circuit for comparing the first and second charges; and
a controller for adjusting the magnitude of vp based on the comparison circuit until the first and second charges are equal and determining vs based on the voltage vp.
2. A voltmeter according to
a voltage source having a voltage vp;
a charge amplifier having a first input coupled to the detector plate, a second input that can be selectively coupled to one of ground and the voltage source, and an output;
a reference capacitor having a capacitance Cf coupled between the first input of the charge amplifier and the output of the charge amplifier;
a difference amplifier having a first input coupled to the output of the charge amplifier, a second input coupled to the voltage source, and an output; and
a controller coupled to the output of the charge amplifier, the output of the difference amplifier, and the shutter, wherein:
in the first sampling stage, with the shutter in the closed position, the voltage measuring circuit reset, and the second charge amplifier input switched to ground, the controller causes the shutter to be moved into the opened position and measures the output Vo of the charge amplifier, which is equal vs*cm/Cf; and
in the second sampling stage, with the shutter still in the opened position, the reference capacitor reset, and the second charge amplifier input switched to the voltage source, the controller measures the output Vy of the difference amplifier, which is equal to vp*cm/Cf; and
the controller determines the quantity cm/Cf based on Vy and the known quantity vp and determines the value of vs based on Vo and the determined quantity cm/Cf.
3. A voltmeter according to
5. A voltmeter according to
6. A voltmeter according to
a reset switch coupled in parallel with the reference capacitor.
7. A voltmeter according to
8. A voltmeter according to
9. A voltmeter according to
11. A method according to
12. A method according to
measuring the charge on the detector plate relative to the reference capacitor and the known voltage vp to obtain an intermediate voltage Vx equal to vp+Vp*cm/Cf; and
subtracting the known voltage vp from the voltage Vx to obtain Vy.
13. A method according to
resetting the reference capacitor before exposing the detector plate to the target surface.
14. A method according to
resetting the reference capacitor between (1) measuring the induced charge on the detector plate relative to a reference capacitor Cf and ground and (2) measuring the charge on the detector plate relative to the reference capacitor and a known voltage vp.
15. A method according to
retracting a shutter from between the detector plate and the target surface.
16. A method according to
18. A voltmeter according to
the nominal modulation capacitance circuit further includes a first reference resistor having a resistance value R and a first charge amplifier, the first detector plate coupled to one input of the first charge amplifier, the first reference resistor coupled in parallel to the charge amplifier between said one input of the first charge amplifier and an output of the first charge amplifier, and another input of the first charge amplifier tied to ground;
the parallel reference capacitance circuit further includes a second reference resistor also having a resistance value R, a second charge amplifier, a voltage source (vp), and a first difference amplifier, the second detector plate coupled to one input of the second charge amplifier, the second reference resistor coupled in parallel to the second charge amplifier between said one input of the second charge-amplifier and output of the second charge amplifier, another input of the second charge amplifier tied to the voltage source, and the first difference amplifier coupled to receive as inputs the output of the second charge amplifier and the voltage source; and
the comparison circuit includes a second difference amplifier having a first input coupled to the output of the first charge amplifier and a second input coupled to the output of the first difference amplifier, wherein:
the controller causes the shutter to be modulated at a predetermined frequency such that the output of the first charge amplifier is equal to R*vs*dCm/dt;
the controller causes the voltage source to output a predetermined voltage vp in phase and frequency with the modulation of the shutter such that the output of the first difference amplifier is equal to R*n*cm*dVp/dt and the output of the second difference amplifier is equal to the difference between the values R*vs*dCm/dt and R*n*cm*dVp/dt;
the controller adjusts the magnitude of the voltage source until the output of the second difference amplifier is null; and
the controller determines vs based on the known quantities vp and n, where vs is equal to vp*n.
19. A voltmeter according to
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This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/555,233 entitled Non-contact, High-voltage Electrometer Architecture with Low-voltage Feedback, filed on Mar. 22, 2004 in the name of Timothy J. Denison, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The invention generally relates to voltmeters, and, more particularly, to non-contact voltmeters that measure a voltage on a target surface without touching the target surface.
Non-contact measurement of a target surface's potential relies on the detection of an electric field. As discussed in D. P. Loconto, High-sensitivity Micromechanical Electrostatic Voltmeter, M. S. Thesis, UC Berkeley EECS, 1992 and R. D. Houston, Non-contacting ESV Technology, Xerox Corporation Internal Report, Rochester, N.Y., March 1983, both of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties, the measurement of electric field strength can be made by cutting the electric field lines between the target surface and an on-chip sense-plate conductor. Together, the target surface and the sense plate form a parallel-plate capacitor structure, denoted as the sense capacitance. A third conductor, the shutter, is held at the same potential as the sense plate and swept across the sense-plate. The shutter's motion serves to modulate the effective area of the sense capacitance relative to the target surface. The varying coupling capacitance results in a dynamic current, proportional to the electric field between the target and the sense plate, that is conditioned by on-chip circuitry.
Features of modern MEMS processing, such as Analog Device's iMEMS3 process, allow for the design and manufacture of a high-performance field-mill. Referring to
Non-Contact Voltmeter Measurement Principle: Servo Loop #1
The iMEMS3 field-mill allows for single-chip implementation of a non-contact voltmeter. The simple field mill architecture, however, can suffer from sensitivity to environmental fluctuations. Examples of these potential error sources include gap variations between the MEMS transducer and the target surface, and variations in the absolute shutter motion due to process and temperature variation. To correct for these variations, the field mill may be placed within a global feedback loop to form a true voltmeter, for example, as discussed in K. S. Lion, Instrumentation in Scientific Research, McGraw-Hill, 1959, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The function of the feedback loop is to adjust the supply reference for the MEMS transducer until it is equal to the unknown target surface potential. When the target, shutter and sense plate are at equal potentials, the motion of the shutter no longer induces a modulation signal and the loop is balanced. The architecture for this instrument is illustrated in
Non-Contact Voltmeter Measurement Principle: Servo Loop #2
A low-voltage feedback strategy can be achieved by local charge cancellation of the induced field-mill charge. One basis for this servo strategy is to superimpose an AC feedback signal onto the summing node of the interface amplifier. Once again we start with a modulating field-mill capacitor Cm, which creates a current equal to Vs(dCm/dt) at the summing node (Vs is the potential difference between the target and detector). As illustrated in sub
This voltmeter architecture suffers from several drawbacks. First, the ratio of (Delta)/go is not really a systematic constant and restricts the accuracy and/or range of the part. Although sufficient spacing between the detector and the target surface can limit sensitivity variations to under 1%, this accuracy comes at the expense of resolution due to noise and susceptibility to external field perturbations. An additional drawback of this architecture is that it is limited to gap modulation in the direction of the target surface. In a MEMS device, significant lateral motion is generally easier to achieve than vertical motion, and this architecture will therefore be difficult to implement effectively. In addition to mechanical constraints, the servo architecture does not lend itself to a lateral implementation for key electrical reasons. Notably, to achieve acceptable attenuation of the high voltage signal, the ratio between the reference capacitance Co and the modulation capacitance Cm must be large. This cannot be achieved with a single lateral plate, where Co and Cm are effectively the same.
Various embodiments of the invention relate to a non-contact voltmeter that measures high-voltage potentials on a target surface with a combination of low-voltage circuitry and MEMS devices. Non-contact metrology has many applications, but is particularly important to the field of xerography and laser printing, where non-contact voltmeters allow for precision measurement and control of the imaging drum's potential. One significant issue associated with existing non-contact voltmeter architectures is the sensitivity of the measurement to variations in the sensor-to-target surface spacing, which makes in-line trim difficult. The spacing sensitivity can be addressed, however, by employing a servo loop. Existing servo architectures, however, require either hybrid high-voltage circuitry that is expensive and bulky, or the use of fairly complicated “ac feedback” techniques that do not fully decouple the gap variation from the measurement accuracy. The architecture described herein allows for full decoupling of the gap and environmental variations while employing only low-voltage devices. When implemented in an integrated MEMS process technology, for example, this architecture allows for significant reduction in electrometer cost while maintaining the accuracy of existing high-end commercial instruments.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention there is provided a voltmeter for measuring an unknown voltage Vs on a target surface without contacting the target surface. The voltmeter includes a voltage measuring circuit having a detector plate forming a capacitance Cm with the target surface and a movable shutter for selectively exposing the detector plate to the target surface. The voltage measuring circuit (1) measures, in a first sampling stage, a charge Vs*B, where B is proportional to Cm; (2) measures, in a second sampling stage, a charge Vp*B, where Vp is a known voltage introduced by the voltage measuring circuit; (3) determines the value B based on the known voltage Vp; and (4) determined the value Vs based on the determined value B.
The voltage measuring circuit may also include a voltage source having a voltage Vp; a charge amplifier having a first input coupled to the detector plate, a second input that can be selectively coupled to either a ground or a reference voltage source, and an output; a reference capacitor having a capacitance Cf coupled between the first input of the charge amplifier and the output of the charge amplifier; a difference amplifier having a first input coupled to the output of the charge amplifier, a second input coupled to the voltage source, and an output; and a controller coupled to the output of the charge amplifier, the output of the difference amplifier, and the shutter. In a first sampling stage, with the shutter in a closed position substantially blocking the detector plate from the target surface, the voltage measuring circuit reset, and the second charge amplifier input switched to ground, the controller causes the shutter to be moved into an opened position exposing the detector plate to the target surface and measures the output Vo of the charge amplifier, which is equal Vs*Cm/Cf. In a second sampling stage, with the shutter still in the opened position, the reference capacitor reset, and the second charge amplifier input switched to the voltage source, the controller measures the output Vy of the difference amplifier, which is equal to Vp*Cm/Cf. The controller determines the quantity Cm/Cf based on Vy and the known quantity Vp and determines the value of Vs based on Vo and the determined quantity Cm/Cf.
In a typical embodiment, the shutter and the detector plate are formed on a common substrate. The controller typically includes a sample-and-hold or equivalent circuit for measuring and storing Vo. In certain embodiments, the voltage source produces a DC voltage. In other embodiments, the voltage source produces an AC voltage, in which case the controller typically includes a demodulator to demodulate the varying signal output by the difference amplifier during the second sampling stage.
The voltage measuring circuit may also include a reset switch coupled in parallel with the reference capacitor. The controller typically resets the reference capacitor using the reset switch before exposing the detector plate to the target surface and also resets the reference capacitor using the reset switch between the first and second sampling stages.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention there is provided a method for measuring an unknown voltage Vs on a target surface. The method involves exposing a detector plate with an equivalent capacitance of Cm to the target surface; measuring a charge Vs*B using the detector plate, where B is proportional to Cm; measuring a charge Vp*B, where Vp is a known voltage; determining the value of B based on the known voltage Vp; and determining the value of Vs based on the determined value B.
Measuring the charge Vs*B may involve measuring the induced charge on the detector plate relative to a reference capacitor Cf and ground to obtain a voltage Vo equal to Vs*Cm/Cf. Measuring the charge Vp*B may involve measuring the charge on the detector plate relative to the reference capacitor and a known voltage Vp to obtain a voltage Vy equal to Vp*Cm/Cf. Exposing the detector plate to the target surface typically involves retracting a shutter from between the detector plate and the target surface. The shutter and the detector plate may be formed on a common substrate. Measuring the charge on the detector plate to obtain the voltage Vy may involve measuring the charge on the detector plate relative to the reference capacitor and the known voltage Vp to obtain an intermediate voltage Vx equal to Vp+Vp*Cm/Cf and subtracting the known voltage Vp from the voltage Vx to obtain Vy.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention there is provided a voltmeter for measuring an unknown voltage Vs on a target surface without contacting the target surface. The voltmeter includes a voltage measuring circuit having a first detector plate forming a capacitance Cm with the target surface and a second detector plate forming a capacitance N*Cm with the target surface and a movable shutter for modulating exposure of the first detector plate to the target surface. The voltage measuring circuit includes a nominal modulation capacitance circuit for measuring a first charge proportional to Vs*dCm/dt using the first detector plate; a parallel capacitance circuit for measuring a second charge proportional to N*Cm*dVp/dt using the second detector plate, where Vp is a known voltage modulated in phase and frequency with the modulated exposure of the first detector plate; a comparison circuit for comparing the first and second charges; and a controller for adjusting the magnitude of Vp based on the comparison circuit until the first and second charges are equal and determining Vs based on the voltage Vp.
The nominal modulation capacitance circuit may also include a first reference resistor or capacitor and a first charge amplifier, the first detector plate coupled to one input of the first charge amplifier, the first reference resistor coupled in parallel to the charge amplifier between said one input of the first charge amplifier and an output of the first charge amplifier, and another input of the first charge amplifier tied to ground. The parallel capacitance circuit may also include a second reference resistor or capacitor, a second charge amplifier, a voltage source (Vp), and a first difference amplifier, the second detector plate coupled to one input of the second charge amplifier, the second reference resistor coupled in parallel to the second charge amplifier between said one input of the second charge amplifier and output of the second charge amplifier, another input of the second charge amplifier tied to the voltage source, and the first difference amplifier coupled to receive as inputs the output of the second charge amplifier and the voltage source. The comparison circuit may include a second difference amplifier having a first input coupled to the output of the first charge amplifier and a second input coupled to the output of the first difference amplifier. The voltmeter also includes a controller coupled to the nominal modulation capacitance circuit, the parallel reference capacitance circuit, and the difference amplifier. The controller causes the shutter to be modulated at a predetermined frequency such that the output of the first charge amplifier is equal to R*Vs*dCm/dt. The controller causes the voltage source to output a predetermined voltage Vp in phase and frequency with the modulation of the shutter such that the output of the first difference amplifier is equal to R*N*Cm*dVp/dt and the output of the second difference amplifier is equal to the difference between the values R*Vs*dCm/dt and R*N*Cm*dVp/dt. The controller adjusts the magnitude of the voltage source until the output of the second difference amplifier is null and determines Vs based on the known quantities Vp and N, where Vs is equal to Vp*N.
The shutter and the detector plates may be formed on a common substrate.
The foregoing and advantages of the invention will be appreciated more fully from the following further description thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Shortcomings of existing non-contact voltmeter designs can be addressed with either of two improved servo architectures. The first architecture overcomes the shortcomings of a lateral field-mill's Co to Cm ratio by multi-sampling the detector capacitance during the sampling step. The second architecture fully eliminates the gap sensitivity by using a parallel reference capacitance Co that is significantly larger than the modulation capacitor. Both techniques improve on the state-of-the-art, allow for ease of MEMS integration, and allow use of only low-voltage electronics.
Improved Non-Contact Voltmeter Architecture #1: Multi-Sampling
In an exemplary multi-sampling architecture, a movable shutter is used to selectively expose a detector plate with an equivalent capacitance Cm to a target surface having an unknown voltage potential Vs. In one sample stage, a charge Vs*B is measured, where B is proportional to Cm. In another sample stage, a charge Vp*B is measured, where Vp is a known voltage. The value B is determined based on the known voltage Vp, and the value Vs is determined based on B.
In order to measure a voltage (Vs) 602 on a target surface 604, the shutter 606 is initially placed in a closed position in which it blocks the detector plate 608 from exposure to the target surface 604, and the system is nulled using the reset switch 699. Then, with the second charge amplifier input switched to ground, the shutter 606 is pulled back, exposing the detector plate 606 with an equivalent capacitance of Cm to the target surface 604. The output (Vo) of the charge amplifier 612, which is equal to Vs*Cm/Cf, is stored by the controller 620, which includes a sample-and-hold or equivalent circuit. At this point, both Vs and Cm are unknown quantities. The reference capacitor 610 is then reset using the reset switch 699, and the second charge amplifier input is switched to the voltage source 616. The output (Vx) of the charge amplifier 612, which is equal to Vp+Vp*Cm/Cf, is fed into the difference amplifier 618, which subtracts Vp, resulting in an output (Vy) equal to Vp*Cm/Cf. The controller 620 receives the output of the difference amplifier 618 and determines therefrom the quantity Cm/Cf based on Vy and the known quantity Vp. The controller 620 then determines the value of Vs based on the stored voltage Vo and the determined quantity Cm/Cf.
It should be noted that this transfer function has no dependence on the physical geometry of the plates or the absolute modulation. This multi-sampling approach has the robust measurement characteristics of the high-voltage servo architecture, but can be achieved monolithically with a low-voltage MEMS process. To ensure the most robust measurement, the parasitic capacitance between the measurement plate and parasitic elements in the sensor system should also be driven with Vp.
It should also be noted that, in various embodiments of the invention, the voltage source (Vp) 616 can be a DC voltage or an AC voltage. If an AC voltage is used, the controller 620 typically includes a demodulator to compensate for the varying input voltage.
It should also be noted that this architecture is self calibrating in that neither Cm nor Cf need to be known a priori.
Improved Non-Contact Voltmeter Architecture #2: Parallel Ref Capacitor
In order to measure a voltage (Vs) 802 on a target surface 804, the shutter 806 is modulated at a predetermined frequency such that the output of the charge amplifier 812 is equal to R*Vs*dCm/dt. At the same time, the voltage source 816 is applied in phase and frequency with the modulation of the shutter 806 such that the output of the difference amplifier 818 is equal to R*N*Cm*dVp/dt. The difference amplifier outputs the difference between the values R*Vs*dCm/dt and R*N*Cm*dVp/dt, and the controller 820 adjusts the magnitude of the voltage source 816 until the two values are equal and cancel out one another at the output of the difference amplifier 819. Using standard servo techniques, the controller 820 can determine Vs based on the known quantities Vp and N. As with the embodiment shown and described with reference to
It should be noted that, while the embodiment described above uses resistors in the nominal and parallel circuits, capacitors could alternatively be used.
One benefit of this parallel architecture compared to the multi-sampling approach is that it is faster, although the absolute capacitance Cm must be controlled with respect to the reference capacitor, which results in either greater circuit complexity or scaling sensitivity.
Although the above discussion discloses various exemplary embodiments of the invention, it should be apparent that those skilled in the art can make various modifications that will achieve some of the advantages of the invention without departing from the true scope of the invention.
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